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Thursday, July 26, 2018

Throwback Thursday "1890's Madison Square"



What an amazing vintage photograph! So clear and crisp with so much detail. This is from the 1890's at Madison Square. Madison Square Park (one of my favorite spots) was owned by William Vanderbilt, and opened in 1879.

Madison Square Park is named for James Madison (1751-1836), a Virginian who was the fourth President of the United States (1809-17). Madison earned the title “father of the Constitution,” from his peers in the Constitutional Convention. He also co-authored The Federalist Papers (1787-88) with New Yorkers Alexander Hamilton and John Jay. Madison was Secretary of State from 1801-09, serving through both of President Thomas Jefferson's terms. As President, he was Commander-in-Chief during the War of 1812 with the British. Madison was the rector of the University of Virginia from 1827 until he died in 1836.

There is so much history to learn about this great city. It is always so cool to read about these places and then see them in person.


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Thursday, June 14, 2018

Throwback Thursday "Bloomingdales"


You have to love my favorite store, Bloomingdales, and this amazing shot from 1935. I could stare at this for hours. Here is some of their history from their website:
    • 1860-1879
    • A Store Is Born
      To think it all started with a 19th century fad - the hoop skirt. That was the first item that Joseph and Lyman Bloomingdale carried in their Ladies' Notions Shop in New York's Lower East Side. In the late 1800's, most fashion retailers specialized in just one type of garment. Not the brothers Bloomingdale - their East Side Bazaar, opened in 1872, sold a wide variety of European fashions. It was the beginning of what would become a "Department Store".
    • 1880-1929
    • Moving Up In The World
      In 1886 came the visionary move uptown to 59th Street and Lexington Avenue. The store expanded steadily and by the 1920's, Bloomingdale's converted an entire city block.
    • 1900-1910
    • Read All About It
      Flexing his marketing muscle, Lyman created splashy ad campaigns to bring people in the door. People started seeing the "All Cars Transfer to Bloomingdale's" slogan everywhere - on billboards, delivery wagons, and even ladies' beach umbrellas.
    • 1940's
    • Lights - Camera - Action!
      Print ads couldn't say it all. The store had to be experienced. So Bloomingdale's became the stage for gala events and fashion shows, including "Woman Of The Year, 1947." With music, lighting and sophistication, it was retailing as theater.
    • 1960's
    • It's In The Bag
      It's not just what you buy - it's what you take it home in, too. We've always looked for new ways to be creative. In 1961, the Bloomingdale's team came up with the first designer shopping bags. Since then, many have become collector's items.
    • 1970's
    • Not A Store, But A Destination
      By the 70's, everyone was stopping by 59th Street and Lexington Avenue for a look - including Queen Elizabeth. People came to see and to be seen. Once there, they were dazzled by the cutting-edge fashion of designers like Ralph Lauren, Perry Ellis and Norma Kamali, who got their first truly big opportunities at Bloomingdale's.
    • 2000+
    • Looking Forward
      Bloomingdale's is committed to once again lead the way with exclusive merchandise, customized services, and alternative shopping venues. Carrying on the Bloomingdale's brothers' dream, we're always finding ways to set our stores apart. That's both the legacy and the promise of Bloomingdale's.

































  • What is your favorite place for shopping therapy in New York City ?

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    Thursday, April 19, 2018

    Throwback Thursday " Marilyn Monroe"


    A very cool photo of Marilyn Monroe from 1955 on the balcony of the Ambassador Hotel, located at Park Avenue between East 50 and 51st Streets. The photographer was Ed Feingersh (1924-1961). The neo-classical hotel, built in 1921, is no longer there. Marilyn Monroe, passed away in 1962, an amazing 56 years ago. You wonder what she must have been thinking just looking over this balcony at the busy streets of the city.

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    Thursday, March 15, 2018

    Throwback Thursday " My Great Aunt Cecilia"


    Another very cool photo from my personal family collection. This would be my Great-Aunt Cecilia. She was the sister of my grandmother, on my Mom's side of the family. I did not find a date for this, such a lovely fashionable photo! I love the cameo and pearls, the hair looks so regal. She really had a very pretty face as well. Wouldn't it be cool to go back in time and meet your ancestors! Someone really needs to invent that time machine, I would be the first in line!!

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    Thursday, March 1, 2018

    Throwback Thursday " Doyers Street"

    This photo from 1901, so many details on Doyers Street, Chinatown. A wholesome neighborhood where milk can be purchased by the glass. The street owes its name to Hendrik Doyer, an 18th-century Dutch immigrant who bought the property facing the Bowery in 1791 and operated a distillery where the post office is now sited and the Plough and Harrow tavern near the corner with Bowery. This is where you will find the famous Nom Wah Tea Parlor opened at 13 Doyers Street in 1927, and is still in operation. Check out my tour with Ahoy New York Tours to see this street now and how much or little it has changed! 

    Happy March 1st everyone! Spring is around the corner! 

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    Monday, January 29, 2018

    Quicksilver Brilliance Adolf de Meyer Photographs

    I was thrilled to visit this exhibition at The Met Quicksilver Brilliance Adolf de Meyer Photographs. It is open until March 18th and I highly suggest you visit if you are in the city while it is on view. The one thing I really love about photography is you can capture a moment in time and keep it forever. I sometimes wonder with cell phone and digital photography if that will go away. For some reason I think photos taken with film just last longer. I hope I am wrong because I don't want the future folks to miss out on some beautiful photography happening in 2018.  

    Information from The Met's website: 

    A member of the "international set" in fin-de-siècle Europe, Baron Adolf de Meyer (1868–1946) was also a pioneering art, portrait, and fashion photographer, known for creating images that transformed reality into a beautiful fantasy. The "quicksilver brilliance" that characterized de Meyer's art led fellow photographer Cecil Beaton to dub him the "Debussy of the Camera." Opening December 4 at The Metropolitan Museum of Art, Quicksilver Brilliance: Adolf de Meyer Photographs will be the first museum exhibition devoted to the artist in more than 20 years and the first ever at The Met. Some 40 works, drawn entirely from The Met collection, will reveal the impressive breadth of his career.

    The exhibition will include dazzling portraits of well-known figures of his time: the American socialite Rita de Acosta Lydig; art patron and designer Count Étienne de Beaumont; aristocrat and society hostess Lady Ottoline Morrell; and celebrated entertainer Josephine Baker, among others. A highlight of the presentation will be an exceptional book—one of only seven known copies—documenting Nijinsky's scandalous 1912 ballet L'Après-Midi d'un Faune. This rare album represents de Meyer's great success in capturing the choreography of dance, a breakthrough in the history of photography. Also on view will be the artist's early snapshots made in Japan, experiments with color processes, and inventive fashion photographs.

    Born in Paris and educated in Germany, de Meyer was of obscure aristocratic German-Jewish and Scottish ancestry. He and his wife, Olga Caracciolo, goddaughter of Edward VII, were at the center of London's café society.

    After starting in photography as an amateur, de Meyer gained recognition as a leading figure of Pictorialism and a member of the photographic society known as the Linked Ring Brotherhood in London. Alfred Stieglitz exhibited de Meyer's work in his Little Galleries of the Photo-Secession and published his images as photogravures in his influential journal Camera Work. At the outbreak of World War I, de Meyer settled in the United States and applied his distinctive vision to fashion as the first staff photographer at Vogue and Vanity Fair, and later at Harper's Bazaar, helping to define the genre during the interwar period.

    I LOVED this tux from the 1930's as it is just so so chic!  




















    The exhibition was organized by Beth Saunders, Assistant Curator in The Met's Department of Photographs.

    The Metropolitan Museum of Art
    Exhibition Dates:
    December 4, 2017–March 18, 2018
    Exhibition Location:
    The Met Fifth Avenue, Floor 2, The Howard Gilman Gallery, Gallery 852

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    Thursday, November 2, 2017

    Throwback Thursday "Vintage Halloween"


    Since this is Halloween week, I felt a vintage photo was due today. I really hated those costumes with the plastic masks. My Mom always made my costumes, she was a great seamstress and my outfits were always cool. I would be the girl in the middle here, with a homemade costume. 

    Did you have a favorite Halloween costume? 

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    Thursday, April 6, 2017

    Throwback Thursday "Easter Egg Roll "


    I cannot believe next weekend is Easter! Time just flies by it seems. This cute photo is from 1936 with the amazing and inspirational Eleanor Roosevelt. 

    In the 1870s, Capitol Hill had become a popular spot for children to roll eggs - and themselves - down the hill on Easter Monday. As the event grew more popular, the toll on the grounds was noticeable. In 1876, Congress passed a law forbidding the Capitol grounds to be used as a children's playground. In 1878, President Rutherford B. Hayes issued an order that if any children should come to the White House to roll their Easter eggs, they would be allowed to do so. The tradition has been carried on since, and has grown into the major event you can experience today.

    One of my favorite Eleanor Roosevelt quotes: "No one can make you feel inferior without your consent. "

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    Thursday, March 9, 2017

    Throwback Thursday "Sinatra at the Stork Club"

    The Sinatra Family. Image via Spooner Central website 

    What a really fabulous photo. My Dad was a huge Frank Sinatra fan, and played his music very often in my home. I am now glad because it gave me an appreciation for this larger-than-life performer. 

    In 1929 during Prohibition, Billingsley, an Oklahoma-native and ex-bootlegger, started the joint as a speakeasy on West 58th Street. Two years later, Prohibition agents came knocking on the door and shut the joint down. Billingsley, refusing to let the agents stop him from running a lucrative business, relocated to East 51st Street. In 1934, when booze was legal again, Billingsley moved his club to East 53rd Street to a space with plenty of room for dancing. The Stork Club, then legal, remained there until it closed its doors in 1965.

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    Thursday, January 12, 2017

    Throwback Thursday "NYC Traffic 1918"

    The one thing that New York City is famous for is the crazy traffic. When I ride in a taxi, I never look straight ahead, always out the window. We wonder, was it always like this? Well, from this photo taken in 1918, it seems that is the case. There are just so many people living on this fantastic island, heavy traffic is a must. This photo was taken on 42nd Street, and is just so detailed. I love the brick roadway as well. Oh, to live in New York City in 1918 would have been one heck of a joy!

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    Thursday, December 15, 2016

    Throwback Thursday " Christmas Tree Delivery"

    How neat is this photo? Searching for some cool shots of NY during Christmas, I came across this one. Those poor horses! That is quite a bit of trees they are carrying! What an interesting time it must have been. I have been really getting into that show "Timeless" and the idea of time travel just blows my mind. I would gladly do that if it was available. Hope you are all getting your shopping done for Christmas as it's coming pretty darn quickly!

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    Thursday, September 29, 2016

    Throwback Thursday "Brooklyn Daily Eagle 1916"

    In keeping with our Brooklyn theme from yesterday, here is a really cool photo from 1916 of the Brooklyn Daily Eagle headquarters. I really love so much about this photograph, so much detail everywhere, I could look at it for hours! The Brooklyn Daily Eagle was a daily newspaper published in the city and later borough of Brooklyn, for 114 years from 1841 to 1955. At one point it was the most popular afternoon paper (with the largest daily circulation in the nation) in the United States. Walt Whitman, the 19th Century poet, was its editor for two years. 

    What is your favorite part of this photo? 


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    Thursday, May 5, 2016

    Photo Gallery Thursday "Times Square 1938"


    Times Square theaters by day, in New York City. The Times Building, Loew's Theatre, Hotel Astor, Gaiety Theatre and other landmarks are featured in this January, 1938 photo. (Bofinger, E.M./Courtesy NYC Municipal Archives) 

    A very neat photo from the NYC Municipal Archives of Times Square. I must say, not one of my most favorite places to visit in the city, prefer at night than in the daytime. I love this photo and it doesn't look quite as busy as it does in 2016! It must have been quite wild for folks in that era to see in person! I wonder what they would think of it today? 


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    Thursday, April 28, 2016

    Throwback Thursday "5th Ave and 42nd Street"




    From our friends at Howard's Hollow, this photo was taken in 1906. Can you even imagine? It just says so many things as you look at each detail. I think I am going to be purchasing some photos from this website to frame in my home as they are just way too darn cool! I love the way everyone is all dressed up to walk around the city, wonder what they would think of our attire today?


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    Thursday, April 14, 2016

    Throwback Thursday "Central Park in 1892"


    A very cool shot of Central Park - Terrace Fountain and the Lake - The Mall taken May 1892. The design is by Miss Emma Stebbins, a New York sculptor: and represents the angel blessing the waters of the pool of Bethesda. In her left hand the angel holds a branch of lilies, emblem of purity. The four figures supporting the basin symbolize Temperance, Purity, Health, and Peace.The fountain commemorates the Croton water system, which first brought fresh water to New York City in 1842. The photo is from the NY Public Library collection. I think it's pretty cool we can still walk in this area and enjoy this gorgeous fountain, some 124 years later!!


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